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North Dakota One of Only Five States With No Court Case Fighting Marriage Ban

Alaska, Georgia, Montana, North Dakota & South Dakota have yet to see lawsuits challenging state constitutional marriage bans

WASHINGTON – Dozens of court cases challenging state constitutional bans on marriage equality have been filed across the country in recent months. Yet in five states – Alaska, Georgia, Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota – there is currently no litigation challenging the constitutionality of their state marriage bans. Today, 33 states prohibit marriage for same-sex couples, either in the form of statutory law or amendment to the state’s constitution.

“North Dakota’s committed and loving gay and lesbian couples deserve the rights and protections that come with marriage, plain and simple,” said Fred Sainz, vice president for communications at the Human Rights Campaign. “Since the Supreme Court’s landmark marriage rulings last year, not a single state marriage ban has survived a federal court challenge. It’s only a matter of time before marriage equality is the law of the land in every corner of this great country.”

Approved in 2004, Constitutional Measure 1 amended the North Dakota Constitution to prohibit the recognition of same-sex marriages in the state. Same-sex couples can legally marry in Iowa and Minnesota, and court cases seeking to overturn state marriage bans have been filed in Arkansas, Missouri, and Nebraska.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has appellate jurisdiction over the district courts of Arkansas, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota. Same-sex couples can legally marry in Iowa and Minnesota, and court cases seeking to overturn state marriage bans have been filed in Arkansas, Missouri, and Nebraska.

Presently there are no less than 55 marriage equality court cases working their way through the judicial system across the country. These cases have been filed in 28 states plus Puerto Rico and account for nearly 250 plaintiffs taking on state marriage bans. Same-sex couples can legally marry in seventeen states and the District of Columbia, while 33 states have a law or constitutional amendment restricting marriage to the union of one man and one woman.

Nine marriage equality cases have reached the federal appeals court level – all in just five federal judicial circuits. In the Tenth Circuit are Kitchen v. Herbert out of Utah and Bishop v. United States of Oklahoma, Sevcik v. Sandoval of Nevada in the Ninth Circuit, DeLeon v. Perry out of Texas in the Fifth Circuit, Bostic v. Rainey of Virginia out of the Fourth Circuit, and four cases out of the Sixth Circuit - Tanco v. Haslam of Tennessee, Bourke vs. Beshear of Kentucky, Obergefell v. Kasich of Ohio, and DeBoer v. Snyder of Michigan. The Sixth Circuit holds the distinction of being the only federal appeals court to date that will consider marriage cases from all states within its jurisdiction.

The Human Rights Campaign is America’s largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality. By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC strives to end discrimination against LGBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all.

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5 Things to Know about LGBT Issues

1. There are roughly 9 million LGBT people in the US and more than 650,000 same-sex couples.

2. 19% of same-sex couples are raising children according to the US Census Bureau's 2011 American Community Survey.

3. There is no federal law that consistently protects LGBT individuals from employment discrimination; there are no state laws in 29 states that explicitly prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation, and in 32 states that do so based on gender identity.

4. More than 100 anti-LGBT bills have been filed in 29 state legislatures.

5. Marriage equality became the law of the land in June 2015 after the Supreme Court of the United States found bans on same-sex marriage to be unconstitutional-and that the fundamenal right to marriage is a fundamental right for all.